I decided to try out the Fluxbox Edition this week. I'm a little bit confused since I'm pretty used to the GNOME desktop. Is there a tutorial, blog, PDF, or anything for that matter to get me started and hit the ground running with Fluxbox?

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

I made an outline (yeah, it's b/c I write a lot) of my problems/concerns w/ Fluxbox:

I. Hardware A. Function keys don't respond @ all B. Volume/multimedia buttons won't work either C. Configuring graphics (it keeps on asking to run in low graphics mode) 1. LCD screen not properly detected 2. Video card not properly configured 3. I wanna have the Elisa Media Center work okay (as a goal) D. Waking up from sleep/hibernate 1. I'm getting a blank screen 2. It takes too long to wake up (if it does) 3. I get a lot of scrambled screens 4. This could [potentially] make me lose any unsaved dataII. Menu system A. Duplicate menus show up (where'd they come from?) B. Any deleted menus stay in the menu like ghosts of deleted apps! C. @ times freshly installed apps won't show up on the menu D. Hey, how do you configure the menu anyway?!III. Appearance A. How do I change/remove wallpapers? B. Are there any special (Compiz-like) effects possible? C. What kinda eye candy is available/what can you expect to get from Fluxbox?

In the end, I feel that my frustration is only initial and I'm willing to take some time to learn this window manager. I wanna do it, but who will help me?

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

Does anyone know where I can find the hardware specs for my laptop so I can configure my video card just right? A lot of the problems I'm having is probably video card related. I found the file for the Mint-MFM Menu and deleted the duplicate entries and am making some headway to learning the system. I still am having frustrations with my sound/media buttons not working (I don't know any way around that--keyboard settings, maybe?) and still don't know how to change wallpapers and get into setting up the menu.

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

I. Hardware A. Function keys don't respond @ all B. Volume/multimedia buttons won't work either C. Configuring graphics (it keeps on asking to run in low graphics mode) 1. LCD screen not properly detected 2. Video card not properly configured 3. I wanna have the Elisa Media Center work okay (as a goal) D. Waking up from sleep/hibernate 1. I'm getting a blank screen 2. It takes too long to wake up (if it does) 3. I get a lot of scrambled screens 4. This could [potentially] make me lose any unsaved dataII. Menu system A. Duplicate menus show up (where'd they come from?) B. Any deleted menus stay in the menu like ghosts of deleted apps! C. @ times freshly installed apps won't show up on the menu D. Hey, how do you configure the menu anyway?!III. Appearance A. How do I change/remove wallpapers? B. Are there any special (Compiz-like) effects possible? C. What kinda eye candy is available/what can you expect to get from Fluxbox?

In the end, I feel that my frustration is only initial and I'm willing to take some time to learn this window manager. I wanna do it, but who will help me?

I. The backends of everything is the same as the XFCE CE and Xubuntu. Anything that works on those distros should work with Fluxbox CE. - A & B: These buttons should work as long as they work with XFCE. Fluxbox CE uses the XFCE libraries to handle these functions. The standard Fluxbox method of handling keyboard shortcuts is to have them defined in ~/.fluxbox/keys. Look in the Wiki for more details.

You can also use the XFCE libraries to handle keyboard shortcut and special keys. Configure them in System Tools > Keyboard Settings > Shortcuts tab.

- C: I think is a driver issue. What graphics card are you using? lspci should give you this info or System Tools > Device Manager.

- D: Again, if Xubuntu can, Fluxbox CE should. Hibernate and suspend is a problematic issue in Linux and it is also inconsistent from one version of Ubuntu to another. Ask me how I know this You could try to disable xcompmgr (the graphical effects) and see if that gets you anywhere... This is explained in the release notes: http://www.linuxmint.com/rel_felicia_fluxbox.php

II. - A, B & C: This sounds like a bug. The menu is created and updated by mint-fm2 and it should add new entries and remove old ones automatically. Can you please give me details as to which applications you installed and/or removed. As and interim fix you can force regeneration of the menu by enabling/disabling menu icons in mintDesktop or deleting the ~/.fluxbox/menu file, logging out and logging in. Does this still give you the same errors? Note that mint-fm2 is started in the ~/.fluxbox/startup file. Make sure it is there... it should be by default. Please read the "Whats New" page: http://www.linuxmint.com/rel_felicia_fl ... atsnew.php

- D: The root menu is stored in ~/.fluxbox/menu while the autoupdated submenus are located in ~/.mint-fm2/submenus/ They are all standard fluxbox menu files... Each entry in the submenus has a commented part (after a '#') to allow mint-fm2 to recognize which applications have been removed. Do not remove these 'tags'. For details on editing the menu, please read the Fluxbox Wiki.

III.- A: Wallpapers in Fluxbox CE are handled by Nitrogen. If you do not want a wallpaper, simply remove Nitrogen from ~/.fluxbox/startup. To configure wallpapers run System Tools > Nitrogen Wallpaper Chooser.

- B & C: Fluxbox is quite minimalistic and so you wont get the eye-popping Compiz style effects. But, there is xcompmgr which is enabled automatically if 3D acceleration is detected. The default setup provides some shadows and light fade in/out effects. Run 'man xcompmgr' in a terminal for more info and change it to your wish in ~/.fluxbox/startup.

You can also have Fluxbox handled transparencies. Set it in the Fluxbox config files (see wiki) or int the menu Fluxbox > Fluxbox Menu > Transparency. Sorry, no wobbly windows Compiz does not work with Fluxbox because they are both window managers. You can only have one or the other.

Please give more info on the menu problems. Mint-FM2 is really my first attempt at creating an application that does anything substantial. So I wouldn't be surprised if there are problems.

I found out how to do some editing of a text editor in the .fluxbox folder (in the "lastwallpaper" file) and I learned how to open my file system on root to add myself some new wallpaper. It took some time, but it was worth it. The other issues, however, are still being looked into....

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

Felicia fluxbox uses nitrogen to handle the wallpaper, and not fbsetbg like most other fluxbox distros... and fgsetbg is what you would configure in the lastwallpaper file. You can use whichever you want... I just thought you should know that.

I installed aumix but there is no indication that my volume buttons (or any of my multimedia buttons) are working at all. I also used the lspci and sudo dmidecode and found a long list of the hardware for my HP Pavilion DV4000 laptop. Let me tell you, that list--it's confusing! How do I find just what the device manager is asking for so I can find the right type of screen make/model and video card?

BTW, how do you get rid of/add new Fluxbox Styles? You know, the changeable styles/themes under settings?

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

I found a particular text file that listed the very same hotkeys (a seemingly perfect match) that my laptop has and am wondering if this is at all pertinent to getting it configured. The file is under the /usr/share/hotkey-setup and is the hp-v2000.hk file. I almost blindly tried to use Keytouch to import the file but it says: "keyboard invalid" and that it "does not contain keyboard element". Would this lead anywhere useful?

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

3. xev gives you information about your mouse and keyboard input. We are interested in the keyboard inputs. Press the keys you would like to use to control volume and paste the output that will appear in the terminal. Here is an example on my laptop when I press the button to launch the email client.

Right now I'm about 3 weeks from graduating from college and I need to be completely up to speed with getting my work done right now. I'm gonna have to put this in the back burner for now, but I wanna reward myself after graduation by trying out Slackware with Fluxbox installed. Cheers!

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

I squeezed in a little time to try out Linux Mint 6 Fluxbox CE, and what do you know, it all works just fine! Thanks a lot Shane! After school is done I'm gonna have a lot of time in my hands to learn to work with Fluxbox, but for now I'm sticking with the main Gnome edition. Great work on this release, guys.

Life's too short to keep things in their "out-of-the-box" condition....

After trying the Fluxbox version today, I'm not sure how much longer it will stay on the Live USB install.

The interface is too flat and has very little distiction between inactive and active elements. Windows pop up not centred on-screen and have to be moved. The file manager window pops up reduced to an unusable size. I accidently found out how to make it full-screen (right-click the header), but I shouldn't have to do that. The USB installer does not make the USB a persistent media - it should always be an option for installation on a USB device/media.

Since my intention is to replace a crappy netbook OS, this project has to pass the "granny" test for the target user and it already looks as if it will fail and Xfce will have to be the GUI of choice.

I'm very glad to hear that it is working well for you, Gunmetal_Ghoul. You did help to point out some bugs with the RC. Thanks!

ddalley: Changing themes can be easily performed from the menu (for Fluxbox) and from the Interface tool (for GTK). And there are quite a few themes available. The placement of new windows is controlled by Fluxbox. If the 'smart placement' doesn't suit you, you can always change it. The file selection dialog bug is a known upstream bug affecting all Intrepid based distros. Our main target installation media is an internal hard disk and we also support mint4win installations. We do everything we can to make sure these work as well as possible. I am sure that more advanced users may want to install to other media such as external hard drives or USB sticks... and there are ways to do this... which these users would know their way around. As for 'granny', Fluxbox surely isn't for everyone... either you get it or you don't. It's a matter of taste I guess... granny or kiddie is another issue... But it could also be an acquired taste